John McQuaid has written about city-destroying super-termites, the slow collapse of fishing communities, hurricane levee engineering, mountaintop removal coal mining, and the global flower business for various publications, including Smithsonian magazine, The Washington Post, Wired, Forbes.com and EatingWell magazine. His work has won a Pulitzer Prize, as well as awards from the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Institute for Biological Sciences, and the International Association of Culinary Professionals. He lives in Silver Spring, Maryland, with his wife, son and daughter. The struggle to satisfy and understand the kids' strange and contradictory food choices (the elder liked super-hot peppers and limes, the younger rice, pasta and cheese) was the inspiration for his book Tasty.
A fascinating and deeply researched investigation into the mysteries of flavor—from the first bite taken by our ancestors to scientific advances in taste and the current "foodie" revolution.
Taste has long been considered the most basic of the five senses because its principal mission is a simple one: to discern food from everything else. Yet it's really the most complex and subtle. Taste is a whole-body experience, and breakthroughs in genetics and microbiology are casting light not just on the experience of french fries and foie gras, but the mysterious interplay of body and brain.
With reporting from kitchens, supermarkets, farms, restaurants, huge food corporations, and science labs, Tasty tells the story of the still-emerging concept of flavor and how our sense of taste will evolve in the coming decades. Tasty explains the scientific research taking place on multiple fronts: how genes shape our tastes; how hidden taste perceptions weave their way into every organ and system in the body; how the mind assembles flavors from the five senses and signals from body's metabolic systems; the quest to understand why sweetness tastes good and its dangerous addictive properties; why something disgusts one person and delights another; and what today's obsessions with extreme tastes tell us about the brain.
Brilliantly synthesizing science, ancient myth, philosophy, and literature, Tasty offers a delicious smorgasbord of where taste originated and where it's going—and why it changes by the day.
發表於2024-12-23
Tasty 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
每次端午節的時候,關於吃甜粽子還是鹹粽子都會在微博上引起一陣“血雨腥風”,說實話,作為一個北方人,我真的無法理解肉粽的存在,類似的爭論還有湯圓吃甜的還是吃鹹的?豆腐腦吃甜的還是吃鹹的?粽子吃甜的還是吃鹹的?番茄炒蛋放糖還是放鹽?所以到底是什麼造成瞭人與人口...
評分超級市場裏的西紅柿,為瞭在超市裏擺起來好看纔培植齣來的,它們的顔色鮮紅欲滴,形狀圓鼓鼓…...經過長期運輸,也能保持最佳外形,不過這樣的西紅柿並不好吃。為瞭符閤市場和農民的需求,那些復雜的味道都在培養的過程中消失瞭。 據說一般做菜不好的人,也能輕鬆駕馭西紅柿炒...
評分每次端午節的時候,關於吃甜粽子還是鹹粽子都會在微博上引起一陣“血雨腥風”,說實話,作為一個北方人,我真的無法理解肉粽的存在,類似的爭論還有湯圓吃甜的還是吃鹹的?豆腐腦吃甜的還是吃鹹的?粽子吃甜的還是吃鹹的?番茄炒蛋放糖還是放鹽?所以到底是什麼造成瞭人與人口...
評分 評分似乎每個人的口味都不太一樣,以前,我們理解為這是我們每個人的舌頭上的味蕾感受能力不一樣導緻的。在上大學的時候,曾經看到過一張叫作“波林圖”的味覺地圖,認為味蕾對不同味道的感受器官分布在舌頭的不同位置,比如舌尖對甜味敏感,舌根對苦味敏感,舌頭兩側則對酸味和鹹...
圖書標籤: 科普 冷知識 英文原版 t旅行生活時尚 s科普 JohnMcQuaid @網 *原文原版
初看標題以為總歸會虐心虐胃 實則更多是從神經科學/心理學/社會學角度講述人類飲食習慣與口味喜好的演變 裏麵的科學小故事都很有趣哇!
評分初看標題以為總歸會虐心虐胃 實則更多是從神經科學/心理學/社會學角度講述人類飲食習慣與口味喜好的演變 裏麵的科學小故事都很有趣哇!
評分初看標題以為總歸會虐心虐胃 實則更多是從神經科學/心理學/社會學角度講述人類飲食習慣與口味喜好的演變 裏麵的科學小故事都很有趣哇!
評分初看標題以為總歸會虐心虐胃 實則更多是從神經科學/心理學/社會學角度講述人類飲食習慣與口味喜好的演變 裏麵的科學小故事都很有趣哇!
評分初看標題以為總歸會虐心虐胃 實則更多是從神經科學/心理學/社會學角度講述人類飲食習慣與口味喜好的演變 裏麵的科學小故事都很有趣哇!
Tasty 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載